Young Howard
New Member
- Location
- Derbyshire
Have used KMC chains for years on my MTBs work great and last a bit longer than Shimano, Chain Reaction do em cheap
My Shimano chain that came with the bike lasted only 300 miles! Wouldn't buy another - plus you need those ridiculous links.
After much research on CC and elsewhere, I replaced it with a KMC X8 99. Lasted about 700 miles. A lot less mileage than some are getting and I'm not a grinder. Replaced that with same and still showing less than 0.75 at about the same mileage. I expect to have to replace it soon. All have been on the same cassette. I've decided to try SRAM next and fit a new cassette. If the SRAM turns out to be made of cheese, I'll try something else... Having said all this though, the KMC has been trouble free and is a doddle to change.
Everything else being equal (ie maintenance), I reckon what works for one may not, for various reasons, give the same results for someone else. It may be just a matter of seeing what works best (much like other bike kit).
And there's an old saying: Buy cheap, buy twice...
Just for info, I run 2 or 3 chains concurrently, swopping them whenever I remove a chain for cleaning.
I've heard of Fiona's technique before. A friend used to run 3 or 4 chains which he kept in numbered plastic boxes soaking in lube. He'd swap to the next chain in the sequence about once a week and reckoned that it greatly extended the working life of his cassettes and chainrings.
Try measuring the chain instead of using the gadget. My SRAM 9 speeds are doing 2,600 miles without damaging the cassette. The pins start off at 1/2" centres. When a foot length has expanded by 1/16" measured on a steel rule then bin it. The cassette should be fine. If it gets past that then expect to replace the cassette. If it gets to 1/8" over then the chainrings are suffering and things really get expensive.